A blog about Stonehenge Replicas. We kid you not.

What is the Clonehenge blog?

This is the most complete list of Stonehenge replicas on the internet, nay, marry, in the wide world! But, look, we know there are more out there. For now, be sure to check out the list of large permanent replicas.

This blog is meant to form a searchable list of Stonehenge replicas from the megalithic follies of the 1800's to the present. Use the search function below to search for your nation or state, for example, or search for replicas by material--for example foamhenge, snowhenge or laptophenge. The blog includes well over 300 examples of imitation Stonehenges from a silicon microstructure to huge permanent replicas and everything in between, including the famous inflatable bouncy Stonehenge!

We invite readers to inform us of modern henges we may have missed, or to send us photos of ones they made. Comments about what motivates people to build Stonehenge replicas are also encouraged. Welcome to the world of henging!

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The Colour of Magic; Virgin Sacrifice Gone Awry!

from Youtube

We have long thought that if there is a Heaven (and we could get into it), it must consist of new, unread Discworld books, and friendly people who like to discuss them as much as we do. Discworld author Terry Pratchett has given us many hours of happiness, and we were bowled over to find, upon renting the Discworld movie The Colo(u)r of Magic last week, that it includes a Stonehenge replica.

On the Discworld, stone circles are the computers and druids are the IT specialists and hardware consultants. (Yes, there is a Discworld and Pratchett Wiki. Get over it.) Here’s a druid line from The Light Fantastic: “They’rehaving trouble with the big circles up on the Vortex Plains. So they say, anyway; I wished I had a bronze torc for every user who didn’t read the manual.”

In the scene above, Twoflower, the Discworld’s first tourist, is intervening in a druid ritual, for although he appreciates its ethnic charm and primitive simplicity, he objects to the actual killing of the virgin . . . The druids aren’t thrilled to have him interfere, and the plot carries on from there.

Silly stuff, definitely, but as always Pratchett uses silly stuff to address serious issues sideways and to lampoon cliches and human foibles. Score for this replica: 6 druids. [Later correction by one P.G.: 7 Wizzards and an ArchChancellor] It’s just some trilithons, but one of those druids is awarded for the gentle jab at society’s romanticising of the henge builders and users. But without all that romanticising there wouldn’t be so many replicas, now, would there? And then where would we be?

Submissions

Want to send us apicture or story of a ‘henge’ or Stonehenge replica? Send your photos of henges, large or small, edible or nonedible, to nancy@clonehenge.com. We encourage eccentricity and downright weirdness!

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